Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 2, 1923, Page 2

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PAGE TWO. he Casper Daily Cribune SUOUTS DISCUo5 WINTER PLANS. — [a= } — | = me <=) = | ot | =< TEAeey four Local Troops In Conference Held at Camp Rotary. j re Nf gaye enna . rict Two, comprising Troops 8 na of t Casper Council of urneyed to Camp | nd held a meet» evening a der plans for the coming 4 > expects to have a very r during the coming ed the plans for the hik expected to save enou, of snowshoes or akdis. A survey hi bétn made for a toboggan and s' sie on the side of the mountains and adine excellent. sport in this line ed. | Scouts last evening had a lunch rs and buns supplemented cream. The weiners were several local business | buns were provided by the Baking Co., and the Palms ve gallons of ice cream for t of the scouts. Al-| n allowance had been made for | there was nothing left | store of food when | ft Camp Rotary. ve H, Roe Bartle ad: troops from the porch of and outlined the needs of of wein Camp Rotary. At the 1 of the Executive's speech, outs were formed in ranks and ched Casper, drilling on the in different manners of march- to mam way ing formations. “SAKE EATERS” BALL 1S = ATTRACTION AT CASINO of the! a novel their ke: co-operating with | sig success. Due | s will be given| during the even-| ling the lucky num: actions together todeo Week bar. nees are drawing thous- per's newest amusement cemter nightly : Marie Roderick and Doug Inttt are beéoming more popular every evening wiih their latest song successes and specialties Doug Isitt in his num- We Have No Bananas,” in parades around the dance fidbr p x a vegetable cart loaded with everything but bananas has prBven the hit of the season. Hp has . 9 humber of other specialties, but due tolmany requests for repeating this number has been unable to get to them. Marie Roderick in “Gypsy Sweet- heart” “I'm Just a Little Blue” and “Morning Will Come’ shares equally with Doug when {t comes to headlin- ing the attractions at the Casino. Bryce Wilson and his Original Tavern orehestra are still holding thelr own and as many of the dance patrons have expressed themselves, “They can’t be beat for music.” ——— Customs Taxes | On Liquors ‘Are Still Payable} HELENA, Aug. 2.—Importers of Uquor into the United States do not escape liability for customs taxes, Judge George M. Bourquin of the U.| 8. District Court here ruled in cases involving automobiles and lMquor ap- prehended by prohibition enforcement officers. The contention of the de- fense that the national prohibition act destroys laws for the collection of customs of liquor, is rejected by the! court he legality of the govern- ment's confiscating automobiles caught in the LUquor traffic is also upheld by Judge Bourquin. HAWAIIAN MUSIGAL SHOW AT THE WYOMING MONDAY Lacy Paska's Hawaiians in the fns- einating musical show “A night in the Orient” will be presented at the i theater Monday and Tues- next week, This show is an entrancing combination of mirth and melody ranging from rag time to opera. It tm something entire 1 different. The company by T. J. Culligan who est of Hawailan shows. to be the best of r for some time. ‘Asthma and Hay Fever! Iker, Mo,, say hma for abo ter taking two Formula I felt liké a new It's the best med. fcine for Asthma I ever used." If you| suffer from A na or Hay Fever| try, McM and you'll know wt © praise it Jugt fine run down peaple, for « bles, . nchial troul weak lungs 2 ae a Join! Council and also the plans} r|patches aasert that the Irish Free! Following in Daddy’s Footsteps ” = & a uf GOV. DAVIS OPEN Mavens couvecTiNG FOR NOMINATION BY ThE DEMOS Boom for Kansas Execu- tive. Is Launched on Chicago Visit. CHICAGO, Aug. 2.—While friends of Governor Jonathan H. Davis of Kansas have put his hat in tne ring for the democratic presidential nomi.| nation the governor who refrained| from commenting to any great extent! | upon the boom his supporters have launched, was on his way to Kansas City after spending two days here on) state business. é While asserting that-he hid no po- Utical ambitions, the governor indi- cated he would gladly accept any position in which he could Le of ser-| vice to his country, including the presidency, OTAGE ‘PEGS’ PHOTOS| 3. Hartley Manners, author of “Peg which has been filmed the direction of King urette Tavior in sting photographs who have appeared on the stage. has been present CANDIDATE. NOW MAY BE LATER Can’t Say What He Will of all the actre in the part of “P. This famous play ea before more tha: 000 audiences. fe has reached practically, every tex] Do Tomorrow, Auto eign cou inclu ngland, Ire a |iand, Wales, Aus , South Africa, Maker Asserts. Ital; nd, Brazil, Canada, Mex- ico, nd the Far Hast. NEW YORK, Aug. 2—Henry Ford HENRY FORD NOW fear co-cetter 1 “I have no political ambitions,” the governor said. “I have gone higher than I ever anticipated and I am | thankful to the people of my state for the honors they have conferred upon But if my party should nom: me there a man It would ref such an honor? The democrats of Kansas have made their first choice and I am in © governor expressed himnef as| ed te ng of prices for the er can have a definite product, why should 1d grocer and shoe- in a similar man- * he remarked. | am against class legislation! “L either for the farmer or for the cap!- talist or for anybody," Governor Davis declared. “But I do believe in fair play and the former has not been getting it. “The inflation period following the war is ended. The farmer knows that. He has paid the profiteer as well as the city man. We are now| at a point where y must use com. mon sense to help the farmer pass through a crisis, That crisis is due to over production of wheat and the shutting down of the European ma ket. Over production will be remedi next year by diversifying the crops planting alfalfa and other things in| of wheat. But we cannot di the over production of th year. We must do something prac- tical to tide the farmer over until next “y year, would eall.an economic confer- ence of everybody interested actively and directly in the production and growing of food products. I would suggest that the farm loan board, or let us say, perhaps, Henry Ford, take over 150,000,000 bushels of wheat at $1 and hold it for 4 year. Whoever did that would lose nothing, for he would control prices absolutely.” _ Prisoners To Be Released By Free State ce LONDON, Aug. 2.— Dublin | State will release all prisoners in ac-| cordance with yesterday's ft ruling of |the court of appeals, and will then r jarrest them under the new pubilo safety act ‘ch the Dall Eireann ed last night About six months ago, several for- eign producers sent Mr. Manners plo- tures of the actresses who were play- ing “Peg.” that Mr. Manners decided to write to all countries w e “Pex” hag been produced and obtain complete sets of They were so interesting | photographs of actresses who have ap- peared in the role, One of the photographs Is that of &@ woman weighing at least three hun- dred pounds, while another makes “Peg” look like a baby vamp. Some greatly resemble Miss Taylor, indi- cating careful casting. “Peg O' My Heart” js at the Wyo- ming theater Saturday. aos abe Mr. and Mrs. EB. C. Goodwin are here for a few days from their home in Missourl. A Pup’s' Woe \\egger, was arrested at Portlan: lore. For 16-days Jiggs wouldn't leat. ° He was taken to the jail, by - then just skin and bones, His mas- ‘ter crie@ and Jiggs_crie®, Then Jiggs ate, S name, FZ — NRG \TO-NIGHT, Tomorrow Alright IR ctomeeras ‘ousnese and eltminative Bs Por ct mand adults. SOLD BY YOUR DRUGGIST, Smith-Turver Drag in an interview appearing in Collters’ this week, declares he is not a candi: date for the prealdency today, but that he can’t say what he will do to- morrow, “Now, tf I wanted to play politics, I would say exactly what I am going to soy, any way,” the manufacturer was quoted as asserting. ‘But I am not playing politics. I am not a can- didate for anything. I can’t imagine myself today agcepting any nomina- tion. Of course I can’t say, and no inte!ligent man can say what I will do tomorrow. There might be a war or some crisis of the sort in which legalism and constitutionalism and all that would not figure, and the nation wanted some person who could do things and do them quick. What I would do then I can't say. But there isn't any such situation now. I have not a political mind, and I don't dee any sense in attempting political leadership. —_—___—_—" Cooking often destroys the delicate flavor of the extract you have used— unless it is Van Duzer’s. They retain their piquaint flavor throughout the process of cooking.—Advertisement, Oe Free your pdultry from lice and mites by putting U-KNOW Lice and Mite Remover in their drink- ing + It etops Insects from obtaining moisture and they leave the fowls. Will NOT taint the fad or flesh and is guaranteed y= J. F. Cowan Hay, Grain 325 S. Durbin St, "eed Co, Casper, Wyo. == VANK SALONS” 7 , Fifteen Seized by Blue- jackets After Captain Is Injured, Report. PEKING, Aug. 8.—(By The Associ: ated Prers.)—In a fracas aboard the American steamer Alfee) Dollar, caus- ed when_a crowd of Chinese soldiers ‘boarded her at Ichang and demanded free transportation, the captain of the ship and three women, Including the wife and daughter of the Dollar line agent, were injured, according to a report reaching customs officials here today. A party of American bdluejackets from a gunboat, responding to a call for help, overpowered the rioters and arrested 15 of them. Shots were fired before the trouble was ended. The Chinese soldiers had become threatening when their demand for a free ride was ref —_—_———— AMERICAN HOTEL CHANCES HANES The American hotel which its located above the A. & F. cafe on Center street, changed hands yester- day when the lease was sold by Arthur Edmunds to Oscar Warren. The new owner has been in Casper about a month, having formerly been in the rooming house business at Laramie. Be Treated by Pub Turning his request into a demand, H. D. Nifong attempted to force John Currigan to play the philanthropist with him Monday and as a result was finda $25 by Judge John A. Murray last night and got 30 days in jail. From the testimony it seemed that Nifong had been drunk and had re- quested the passer-by for a hand-out. Failing to get it he was going to force the matter. Dora Wray was fined $25 as a sus- picious character unable to give a good account of herself. L, Shaw was fined $25 for a disturbance and C. Williams was fined $15 for being drunk. Relief, CONTRACT FOR PRISON LABOR IS RENEWED Aug. 2.—(Spe- ‘The Wyoming Board of Charities and Reforms to- day announced its decision to renew the contract of Reliance Shirt com- pany to utilize the labor of Wyoming convicts in the manufacture of shirts. The only other bidder for the con- victs’ service was Salant and Salant. | Under the new contract the Reliance | company will pay about 26 per cent {more for the convicts’ labor than under its present contract. The new rates will be 62% cents per dozen for two pocket garments and 60 cents per dozen for one pocket garments. —_— PIRATES LOSE RUBBER GAME TO NEW YORK FORBES FIELD | PITTSBURGH, Aug, 2.—New York won the odd game of a five game series with Pittsburgh todsy, 3 to 2. New York scored in the first, third and firth innings while the Pirates’ runs were made in the second and sixth. Score.— RHE New York ---.------_--.----38 8 1 Pittsburgh ~~... —eenennd 9 2 Manager McGraw sent John Wat- son to the rubber while Lee Meadows was manager McKechnie's choice to pitch. The Giants scored a run in the first inning on a pass to Young, and Groh's triple. The Pirates tied the score in the second inning on singles by Trayner, Maranville and Grimm. Another run came over for the THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1923. Giants in the third on Young's single, Frisch’s single and Carey’s fumble. New York added another run tn the fifth after two were out on Traynor’s fumble of Groh’s hit and Frisch's double into right field. The Pirates scored a run in the sixth on Bigbee'’s single, bis steal of second and Traynor's single, Frisch led off in the with a single to right but Me’ hit into a fast double play. Stengle Man Who Fired | First Shot at Gettysburg Dies [AMESTOWN, N. ¥., Aug. 3A pheus Hodgea, 81 officially recognized as the man who fired the first shot at the Union army at the battle of Gettysburg is dead. Another link is added to the long, chain of evidence regarding both the immediate and lasting good that is be- ing accomplished by Tanlac. Mrs. Catherine Murphy, wife of David Murphy, well known poultry raiser, residing at 1530 Portland Ave., Walla Walla, Wash., Says: . “Two years ago Tanlac relieved me of a caso of indigestion that had kept me migérable for months and months. I would bloat so badly I could hardly get my breath. Everything I would eat affected me the same way and I lost my appetite entirely. “My energy and strength about all left me. I was too nervous to sleep, and got up mornings feeling even MRS MURPHY GIVES _ CONVINCIN G EVIDENCE worse than when I retired at night. My husband was so benefited by Tan- lac that I began taking {t too, and be- fore I had finished the first bottle I had @ good appetite and could eat without my stomach bothering me any more. 80 I took two more bottles and then I felt fine in every way. I have also recommended Tanlac to my friends and have never known # one who did not have a good word for it.” Tanlac is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over 37 million bottles sold, Tanlac Vegetable Pills are Nature's own remedy for constipation, For sale everywhere.—Advertisement, 228 E. Second St. ON a in coc S. N. Brooks and Elmer Spurlock are spending a few days in the Big Horn mountains on a fishing tri Weak Eyes? Camphor If you have weak, aching eyes try simple camphor, witchhazel, hydras- tis, etc., as mixed in Lavopttk eye wash. One small bottle helps eny case” weak, strained or sore eyes. E 4 THE BEST BY TEST Pigeon’s Fresh Roasted Coffee CASPER + 1S - THE = Phone 623 FUTURE - CAPITAL. Aluminum eye cup free. Casper | Pharmacy.—Advertisement. CASPER BUICK COMPANY |)" 182 N. Wolcott AT NOON . Notice OUR EMPLOYES WANT TO SEE THE RODEO, : ' $0 DO WE, CONSEQUENTLY _OUR STORE WILL CLOSE FRIDAY, AUGUST 3 Campbell-Johnson Co. HEAD TO FOOT CLOTHIERS Phones 1741-2260; ma -O4 -20-0MmyD *Mrots - w—-I4 + Z- * <4-0 + AND—4- ety mM - r= G Two persons can use the same Checking account in this bank, by mutual agreement. Each can check out of it or deposit in it. This arrangement is often convenient, - as when, for example, a man has to be away from home a good deal and his wife take care of the family’ swants. | - r ? ra Two persons can have a joint Sav- ings account here, by mutual agreement, Two can use the same Safe.De- . posit Box, by mutual agreement. And two pees who are trying to get together on a busiens sdeal can come here for advice on their plans and the financial features of their compact. § ZO—APNOM - KHN—OOF - MIA: MPT: 4—° MAPA: MI4 - aD TIONAL BANK CONSOLIDATED ROYALTY BLOG STAR BETTER SEE THESE CARS BEFORE YOU DECIDE UPON THAT NEW CAR YELLOWSTONE MOTOR SALES» 444 E, Yellowstone Phone 1381

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